50 Pa. Super. 135 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
On the east side of Sixth street, immediately north of Queen street, in the city of Philadelphia, are three contiguous improved lots, known and numbered respectively 807, 809 and 811. In 1847 this entire property was owned by one William Shaw who died seized thereof. By his will he devised the corner property, No. 811, to his nephew, Thomas B. Shaw and his children, and particularly described it in the following language, to wit: "Being about twenty feet six inches on Sixth street and about forty feet on Queen street, the front and back lines to be the same width parallel with Queen street.” In the same will he devised to another nephew the premises immediately north of the corner lot, as well as the then vacant lot still further north. By divers mesne conveyances the title to lot No. 811 has become vested in Lauria, the defendant, while the title to the remaining property adjoining it on the north has in like manner become vested in Shaffer, the plaintiff. In all of these conveyances the respective lots are properly described according to the boundaries mentioned in the will referred to and show no encroachment or overlapping by the one as against the other. As already noted, in the devises from the common ancestor, and in every conveyance since that date, the three lots are described as having the same depth, each extending from Sixth street eastward to the property line of a stranger in the rear. The corner lot, 811, has been continuously assessed in the name of
Many years ago — the exact date not being fixed by the testimony — an outside privy vault and building were constructed on the northeast corner of the entire property as originally owned, to wit, on the northeast corner of lot 807, and the owners and tenants of the corner lot, 811, had access to this structure by a way along and across the rear ends of Nos. 809 and 807. It appears further that at some time a fence was constructed across 807 and part of 809, thus dividing to that extent the narrow way already referred to from the remaining portion of the lot. The brick building on 809 did not extend the full depth of the lot, nor even as far back as the line of the fence last referred to, and thus the open way at the rear of the two lots was irregular in shape, being considerably wider at the south than at the north end.
In February, 1910, the plaintiff began this action of ejectment to recover the possession of the strip of ground already referred to, being the rear end of his two lots. As he was able to show a continuous line of conveyances from the common ancestor in title down to himself, all of which embraced the ground described in the writ, the continuous payment of taxes under assessments which followed the regular recorded title, and that he and those under whom he claimed had been constantly in the possession of at least the greater portion of the property conveyed to him, he undoubtedly made out a prima facie case; The defendant’s line of title shows no conveyance to him or any ancestor purporting to vest in any of them any interest whatever in the ground in dispute. He, however, asserts his ownership of the soil and his right to the exclusive possession thereof under the statute of limitations. In other words, not denying in any way the force and effect of the recorded conveyances in both lines of
On the trial it appeared that the present defendant bought the corner lot by a deed dated May 7, 1889, recorded shortly thereafter. It is clear, therefore, that the statutory period had not run before the impetration of the writ in the present action if the possession of the defendant is to be legally computed from the date when he entered under his deed. In order to piece out that possession he must of necessity tack it to an earlier adverse possession by some predecessor in title, and under such circumstances that the law will regard both possessions as continuous. The immediate predecessor in title of the present defendant was one Gehner who acquired his title in 1876. Even if there was room under the testimony, to which we shall in a moment refer, for a finding that any possession by Gehner of the strip in dispute, which was wholly outside the lines of his deed, was so adverse to the real owner as to create what has been called a sprouting title to the strip of land in dispute, it is also clear that he made no attempt to convey any such interest to the present defendant.
In Schrack v. Zubler, 34 Pa. 38, the Supreme Court, by Mr. Justice Thompson, said: “No doubt, a succession may be kept up by tacking possessions; but each succeeding occupant must show title under his predecessor, so as to preserve a unity of possession. . . . Zubler could only claim Herring’s possession as enuring to his use, by virtue of some conveyance of it, which we have seen he had not. The want of this essential in the continuity of possession, renders unnecessary any further notice of what was said
What then was the nature of the possession of Gehner as disclosed by the evidence? On the trial the defendants themselves offered in evidence the record of a certain pro
There remains one other question earnestly urged upon us by the able counsel for the appellants. On the trial the defendants further offered in evidence the record of another equity proceeding to No. 522 of June term, 1882, in the court of common pleas, No. 2 of Philadelphia county. In that case the parties were the same as in the one already noted although their positions were reversed. McCarron there sought an injunction to restrain some alleged threatened invasion of his property by Gehner. Ex parte affidavits were filed by plaintiff and defendant in support of their respective motions to continue and dissolve the preliminary injunction. The record shows that the injunction was dissolved and the proceeding thus ended. One of the affidavits there filed was by one Young who had been the bailiff or agent for Gehner in charge of his property. On the present trial the defendants offered in evidence that ex parte affidavit and the learned trial court rejected it. How could it be admissible as evidence in the trial of this action? Not on the ground that it was the testimony of a former witness because, as stated, it
Judgment affirmed.